Kim Min-ha says her new feature centers less on spectacle than on the quiet recalibration that follows escape. In Hana Korea, the Pachinko actor plays Hyesun, a young North Korean defector learning to navigate everyday freedoms at a South Korean resettlement center, from bank cards to basic consumer life. The film, directed by Denmark’s Frederik Sølberg, premiered at the Busan International Film Festival and rolled out its first footage in the lead-up to the event, positioning the story as an intimate portrait of acclimation rather than an action-driven thriller.
Festival and sales materials describe Hyesun’s journey as grounded in lived experience, focusing on the emotional and practical steps needed to start over while carrying ties to family left behind. The creative team includes co-writer Sharon Choi, known for her work alongside Bong Joon Ho, and a cast featuring Kim Joo-ryoung and An Seohyun. The emphasis on day-to-day adjustments—how to shop, pay, and move through a bustling city—frames resettlement not as an endpoint but as a series of small, sometimes disorienting firsts.
Early materials highlight the film’s observational style and character-first approach, with Hyesun encountering new alliances and bureaucratic hurdles while piecing together a viable future. The premise arrives as audiences have grown more familiar with stories of flight across the peninsula, yet this project narrows the lens to the transitional phase that often follows headlines: orientation classes, paperwork, and the economics of survival.
The footage released ahead of Busan signals restrained visuals and a performance-driven arc for Kim, who has drawn international attention for her period work on television and now shifts to a contemporary setting shaped by policy, culture shock, and the private cost of starting again.















































